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Many investors in options trading find that even though their directional judgment was correct, they did not achieve the expected returns. This situation occurs frequently and is puzzling. The problem may lie in choosing the wrong strike price. Correctly understanding strike price selection is crucial for profitability. Investors should focus on pricing methods and risk control to improve trading performance.
In options trading, about 90% of loss cases are closely related to wrong strike price selection. Strike price directly impacts intrinsic value, time value, and implied volatility changes. Many investors judge market direction correctly but still fail to profit because of improper strike price choice. Below are three common reasons.
Intrinsic value is the core of an option. If investors pick the wrong strike price, the option may be out-of-the-money (OTM), leading to total loss at expiration. In the U.S. market, when buying calls, if the strike price is above the underlying asset price, the option has no intrinsic value. When buying puts, if the underlying price is above the strike, it also has no intrinsic value. Leverage magnifies both gains and losses—OTM options can result in losing all principal.
The wrong strike price can put an option OTM, exposing investors to 100% loss.
| Option Type | Explanation | Loss Situation | 
|---|---|---|
| Call option | Strike above underlying price → intrinsic value = 0 | May lose entire investment | 
| Put option | Underlying price above strike → intrinsic value = 0 | May lose entire investment | 
| Leveraged trade | Leverage magnifies results; OTM losses are bigger | 100% loss at expiration | 
Time value is an important part of option pricing. If investors ignore time decay (Theta), they may lose significant value before expiration. In the U.S. market, short-term options decay faster, especially OTM options. Holding short-term OTM options accelerates capital loss. Strategies like calendar spreads or vertical spreads also become harder to manage if strike prices are chosen poorly.
Implied volatility reflects market expectations of future price swings. If investors ignore volatility shifts when picking strike prices, option prices may swing sharply, affecting returns. In the U.S., buyers pay higher premiums when implied volatility rises, increasing costs. Sellers collect higher premiums but face greater exercise risk. With the wrong strike, volatility changes worsen losses.
Investors must recognize the risks of wrong strike prices and weigh intrinsic value, time decay, and implied volatility to choose scientifically.

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In the U.S., call buyers expect prices to rise. When picking strikes, they must balance cost and profit potential. Lower strikes cost more but carry higher intrinsic value and win probability. Higher strikes are cheaper but need bigger moves. Many investors pick the wrong strike, so even if direction is right, they don’t profit.
Example: A call with USD 100 strike—if the underlying is USD 102 at expiration, after costs the trade may still lose.
Put buyers expect declines. Higher strikes are more expensive but more profitable if prices fall. Lower strikes are cheaper but need large drops to profit. Ignoring strike vs. volatility often results in being right on direction but not profiting.
Example: A put with USD 50 strike—if the underlying falls only to USD 48, after cost there may be no net profit.
Sellers mainly earn premiums. Strike selection must consider exercise risk. Higher call strikes bring lower premium but less exercise risk. Lower put strikes also lower premiums but reduce risk. Wrong strikes may lead to big losses.
Selling requires aligning strike selection with trend and risk tolerance.
In the U.S., traders often watch support and resistance when analyzing options. Support is a level where buying emerges; resistance is where selling appears. Strikes near these levels improve probability.
Support and resistance are crucial in options. Calls ideally near support; puts near resistance.
| Option Type | Recommended Strike | Expected Effect | 
|---|---|---|
| Call | Near support | Higher win rate | 
| Put | Near resistance | More downside | 
Sentiment and expectations shape strike choices. U.S. traders often analyze option sentiment indices.
For example, studies of SSE 50ETF options found sentiment boosts call premiums. While that’s China, U.S. markets show similar effects.
Strike choice starts with risk tolerance. High-risk investors may use OTM (cheaper but riskier). Low-risk investors should use ITM or ATM (higher intrinsic, safer). Beginners often lose principal picking OTM. Experienced traders diversify positions to limit single-contract risk.
Always predefine max loss per trade to protect the portfolio.
Goals also shape strike choice. For high short-term gains, OTM with leverage may fit, but expect losses. For steady growth, ITM or ATM is better. Beginners should start simple; advanced traders can try spreads like butterflies.
| Goal | Recommended Strike | Risk | 
|---|---|---|
| High return | OTM | High | 
| Steady growth | ITM/ATM | Low-Med | 

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In options, risk management is key. Strike price directly impacts profit potential and risk exposure. Many lose money despite correct direction due to wrong strikes. Investors often manage this by:
Smart strike choice is central to risk management. Adjust with market conditions.
Single contracts are risky. Many use spreads to diversify. Examples:
| Strategy | Risk | Profit Features | 
|---|---|---|
| Vertical | Low-Med | Limited profit | 
| Calendar | Med | Time value arb | 
| Butterfly | Low | Limited risk/return | 
Strike choice decides profit probability.
| Strike Position | Risk | Premium | Profit Chance | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Deep ITM | Low | High | 70-80% | 
| ATM | Med | Med | 50-60% | 
| Deep OTM | High | Low | 20-30% | 
Avoiding wrong strikes requires:
Yes. Adjust by closing and reopening, or hedging with spreads. Timely adjustments cut risk.
Consider underlying price, volatility, and risk tolerance. Reasonable strikes are near current price.
ATM or slightly ITM. Safer with higher intrinsic value. Avoid deep OTM to protect capital.
| Strike Type | Risk | Recommended For | 
|---|---|---|
| ATM/ITM | Low-Med | Beginners | 
Strikes define spread risk/reward. Proper combos raise win chance. Adjust with market.
Yes. Short-term → more theta risk → pick ATM for safety. Long-term → OTM works for leverage.
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*This article is provided for general information purposes and does not constitute legal, tax or other professional advice from BiyaPay or its subsidiaries and its affiliates, and it is not intended as a substitute for obtaining advice from a financial advisor or any other professional.
We make no representations, warranties or warranties, express or implied, as to the accuracy, completeness or timeliness of the contents of this publication.




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